I'm not the average user because I grew up with the "right" sound. I made home acoustics myself, so I know perfectly well what to expect from small speakers with a silk tweeter and good construction. But alas, despite the laudatory reviews of Edifera, I was not impressed, no, they are not bad for background voice acting and games, but they will not deliver pleasure from listening to music. Because the speakers are designed just for unpretentious people who grew up on the sound of a boombox and a music center, which is why there are so many good reviews. The speakers have a dull middle and a protruding 80Hz sub-bass, this is exactly what users perceive as "bassing cool", and this is also the reason for the "mumbling". The speakers have the most expensive price among competitors and I'm sure they could have been made better (the phase inverter is longer, the film capacitor for the tweeter and a small frequency response correction in the digital amplifier). It's just not necessary, teenagers will not like the even character in the sound without pseudo-bass, such is the marketing direction. Therefore, I will not say that Edifer is cooler than Sven and Microlab - "one-figure" with slight differences.
🔊 Edifier R1700BTs Active Bluetooth Bookshelf Speakers - High-quality Wireless Studio Monitor Speaker - 66w RMS with Subwoofer Line Out
67 Review
Sound Bar Xiaomi Mi TV Soundbar White
63 Review
Edifier R1280T Active Bookshelf Speakers - 2.0 Stereo Near Field Monitors - Wooden Enclosure - 42 Watts RMS - Ideal for Studio Monitoring
65 Review
Soundbar Xiaomi Redmi TV Soundbar black
53 Review
JBL Horizon Bluetooth Alarm Clock Radio with Multiple Alarms, Soothing Ambient LED Light, Automatic LCD Display, and Dual USB Charging (White, AM/FM Radio)
41 Review
AUNA Connect 150 Black 2.1 Wi-Fi Internet Radio Music Player With MP3 USB Port, AUX & Remote Control - Black
16 Review
Sony ICFC1TBLACK Alarm Clock Radio
11 Review
Stream Your Favorite Tunes With AUNA KR-200 SI Internet Kitchen Radio - Spotify Support, Remote Control, And More!
15 Review